Publications by authors named "Selma L van Esveld"

Article Synopsis
  • - The SUPV3L1 gene encodes a helicase primarily found in mitochondria, crucial for unwinding RNA and DNA using ATP, and was studied in two patients with a specific mutation leading to a shortened protein.
  • - These patients exhibited neurodegenerative symptoms including spastic paraparesis, growth issues, and ocular problems, alongside neuroimaging revealing brain atrophy and other abnormalities.
  • - Research indicated that the mutation compromised mitochondrial function, as seen in reduced protein expression and RNA buildup, but restoring the normal gene partially corrected these issues, confirming the mutation's role in their disease.
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species have a single mitochondrion that is essential for their survival and has been successfully targeted by antimalarial drugs. Most mitochondrial proteins are imported into this organelle, and our picture of the mitochondrial proteome remains incomplete. Many data sources contain information about mitochondrial localization, including proteome and gene expression profiles, orthology to mitochondrial proteins from other species, coevolutionary relationships, and amino acid sequences, each with different coverage and reliability.

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Even though the mammalian mitochondrial genome (mtDNA) is very small and only codes for 13 proteins, all being subunits of the oxidative phosphorylation system, it requires several hundred nuclear encoded proteins for its maintenance and expression. These include replication and transcription factors, approximately 80 mitoribosomal proteins and many proteins involved in the posttranscriptional modification, processing, and stability of mitochondrial RNAs. In recent years, many of these factors have been identified and functionally characterized, but the complete mtRNA-interacting proteome is not firmly established.

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In order to synthesize the 13 oxidative phosphorylation proteins encoded by mammalian mtDNA, a large assortment of nuclear encoded proteins is required. These include mitoribosomal proteins and various RNA processing, modification and degradation enzymes. RNA crosslinking has been successfully applied to identify whole-cell poly(A) RNA-binding proteomes, but this method has not been adapted to identify mitochondrial poly(A) RNA-binding proteomes.

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Newly synthesized mitochondrial RNA is concentrated in structures juxtaposed to nucleoids, called RNA granules, that have been implicated in mitochondrial RNA processing and ribosome biogenesis. Here we show that two classical mtDNA replication factors, the mtDNA helicase Twinkle and single-stranded DNA-binding protein mtSSB, contribute to RNA metabolism in mitochondria and to RNA granule biology. Twinkle colocalizes with both mitochondrial RNA granules and nucleoids, and it can serve as bait to greatly enrich established RNA granule proteins, such as G-rich sequence factor 1, GRSF1.

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